In this special bonus episode, entrepreneur and author Nick Gray leads you through the advice in his book, “The 2-Hour Cocktail Party”, including the benefits of hosting, both personal and professional, how to make everyone feel included and even get help along the way, how to be the perfect guest, the two magic words for meeting new people at an event, the best days to throw a shindig, and a lot more.
The 2-Hour Cocktail Party: Book info
The 2-Hour Cocktail Party: Amazon
Networking Event: How to Host One EasilyClothing Swap Tips and Tricks from Nick Gray (How to do it)
Happy Hour Best Practices: How to Plan, Host, and Throw a Great Party
Today we are pleased to be joined by Nick Gray, author of The Two Hour Cocktail Party.
Host:The only guide you'll ever need to hosting the Perfect Networking Event, and a surprisingly quick
Nick Gray:read, that's the highest compliment when somebody says A fast and a quick read, and I'm like, yeah, this isn't Rocket science.
Nick Gray:How to host a good networking event, how to host a happy hour.
Nick Gray:It's easy.
Nick Gray:Give
Host:us a bit of your
Nick Gray:back.
Nick Gray:So I grew up very middle class in Dallas and in North Georgia.
Nick Gray:I went to school in North Carolina, uh, but I started making webpages when I was young, and then I started a web hosting business when I was in high school.
Nick Gray:And I got really lucky with that.
Nick Gray:And after college, my dad, who, that's where I got the entrepreneurial nature from, he was starting a business in the basement of our house called Flight Display Systems.
Nick Gray:They made that map that shows you where the plane is flying across the country, and he made that for.
Nick Gray:For small planes, right?
Nick Gray:So that map existed, but if you had a small plane and you wanted that, you had to buy the same one that the airlines and Boeing bought.
Nick Gray:And over the next couple years, we built it up to about 70 employees.
Nick Gray:And yeah, we sold that to a private equity company in 2014.
Nick Gray:I'd actually left the business a year.
Nick Gray:Before selling it to start and kind of go off on my own, I started my next business, which was called a museum hack, and that's where we did those Renegade museum tours.
Nick Gray:I feel like
Host:Renegade Museum tours is going to be a new phrase for a
Nick Gray:lot of us.
Nick Gray:Renegade museum tours mean that I would hire people like standup comedians and Broadway actors to lead the tours science teachers.
Nick Gray:Imagine like the coolest science teacher you ever had in middle school.
Nick Gray:I would hire them to be the museum tour guide and I would teach them about art and the museum.
Nick Gray:They worked for me, not the museum.
Nick Gray:So they would tell you the juicy gossip and the back stories about the.
Nick Gray:We started it for the tourists, right?
Nick Gray:They're gonna go to the museum one out of a sense of obligation, but we wanna give 'em a fun experience.
Nick Gray:And then where we made our money, where we turned it into a multimillion dollar business, was by taking that fun family activity and turning it into like a corporate team building experience.
Nick Gray:It was a really cool experie.
Nick Gray:But how does
Host:that make you a party
Nick Gray:authority?
Nick Gray:Right?
Nick Gray:How does it make you a party expert?
Nick Gray:Well, I launched that last business museum hack on the back of this network of acquaintances and loose connections and weak ties I'm talking about and trying to encourage people to think about your network of acquaintances.
Nick Gray:Many of us maybe have a couple close friends.
Nick Gray:15% of males do not even have one close friend.
Nick Gray:We're in a friendship recession.
Nick Gray:Most American adults haven't made a new friend in three years, and so I'm on this mission with my book to think about and help people say, Hey, how could your life be different if you had more acquaintances?
Nick Gray:Because acquaintances can help you refer customers for your.
Nick Gray:Acquaintances can turn into friends and you can build big relationships.
Nick Gray:I got to be an expert by hosting hundreds of parties because when I moved to New York, I was not social.
Nick Gray:I did not know how to meet people or talk to people.
Nick Gray:I would go to these networking events that were terrible.
Nick Gray:I just didn't have a lot of success.
Nick Gray:So instead, I decided to bring the party to me and start to figure out how I could host my own.
Nick Gray:I wrote this book really for the first time host, for the person who doesn't have experience hosting.
Nick Gray:My goal is to truly inspire a new generation of hosts, cuz I think many people never host or they only host for special life moments like a birthday, a wedding, something like that.
Nick Gray:I'm trying to say, look, the biggest benefits for you and your business can come when you can make hosting
Host:a habit.
Host:Introverts will recognize the value here, but some of our more extroverted listeners may say, I don't need this.
Host:What do you say to them?
Nick Gray:I talked to a guy last night, his name is Angelo.
Nick Gray:He lives in Phoenix, Arizona, and Angelo sent me a text during his party, um, he said, look, we got 20 people here.
Nick Gray:They seem to be socializing enough.
Nick Gray:Everybody's talking, do I need to run an icebreaker?
Nick Gray:That's what most people think.
Nick Gray:Well, everybody's talking.
Nick Gray:Why do I need to add structure?
Nick Gray:To the party.
Nick Gray:I said, Angelo, you need to do it.
Nick Gray:I don't have time now.
Nick Gray:You don't have time to explain, but just trust me.
Nick Gray:Do it and I'll tell you why later.
Nick Gray:And he did it and he said, oh my God, you were so right.
Nick Gray:Running an icebreaker helped to shuffle the room and mix people up.
Nick Gray:So one of the things that that common host, people who host already say, I don't need to add structure.
Nick Gray:I wanna be the cool host.
Nick Gray:I just wanna be chill.
Nick Gray:Well, when you run an icebreaker, it does two things.
Nick Gray:Number one, it helps break up your existing conversations.
Nick Gray:Have you ever been at a party and you get trapped?
Nick Gray:In a conversation, you're kind of ready to be done with it.
Nick Gray:Well, when you do an icebreaker, it gives you an excuse to break up the room and mix it up.
Nick Gray:Icebreakers also help for everybody at the party to kind of signal and say, who's there, so you can go up and talk to somebody new.
Nick Gray:That's the whole purpose of my party formula, is to encourage as many little connections as
Host:possible.
Host:We're talking a lot about having structure to the party is spontaneity over.
Nick Gray:No, I love spontaneity, especially for advanced hosts, right?
Nick Gray:See, and an easy way to remember what goes into the party formula is to think about my name.
Nick Gray:My name is Nick.
Nick Gray:It's spelled N I C k.
Nick Gray:The N stands for name tags.
Nick Gray:Every one of my parties always has name tags.
Nick Gray:When you use name tags, it shows that there's no clicks at your party.
Nick Gray:Everybody's on the same level.
Nick Gray:It's a safe space to go up and start new conversations, and so the name tags really help to the spirit of having new conversations.
Nick Gray:That's what I'm obsessed with.
Nick Gray:I am
Host:assuming the other three letters in your name are part of the acronym.
Host:Also
Nick Gray:the I stands for icebreakers, and what you would do is you'd circle everybody up, maybe give 'em a five minute warning.
Nick Gray:Hey everybody, in five minutes we're gonna do a round of icebreakers.
Nick Gray:By the way, that gives them an excuse to end the conversations.
Nick Gray:Because again, we want a lot of starting and stopping of new conversations.
Nick Gray:You'll circle everybody up and say, all right, everybody, we're gonna just go around the room real quick.
Nick Gray:Say your name, say what you do for work.
Nick Gray:If you don't wanna talk about work, you can say a hobby that you do, and then say the icebreaker.
Nick Gray:And so that's the last one, right?
Nick Gray:So all of them have name what you do for work, and then the icebreaker question at the beginning of a party.
Nick Gray:There's not.
Nick Gray:People aren't ready to be vulnerable.
Nick Gray:They're not ready to share.
Nick Gray:Please keep in mind a good icebreaker is a fast icebreaker.
Nick Gray:It's not a brain teaser.
Nick Gray:It's why I don't like the question of what's your favorite book that's definitive.
Nick Gray:It might elicit judgment.
Nick Gray:People are like, oh my God, what are they gonna say?
Nick Gray:What can I think to sound the smartest?
Nick Gray:It's hard for people.
Nick Gray:You put them on the.
Nick Gray:Now about an hour later at your party, that's when I suggest doing an advanced icebreaker.
Nick Gray:The Advanced icebreaker.
Nick Gray:The purpose is to add value to the room.
Nick Gray:We're gonna ask you what's the best piece of media.
Nick Gray:That you've consumed recently.
Nick Gray:It could be a podcast like this, a movie or a TV show you binge watched on Netflix because everybody's gonna go around the room and give good recommendations in a peer group, a group of neighbors, or people in your community.
Nick Gray:Sharing those recommendations is so powerful cuz everybody gets ideas of new stuff that they might wanna watch, read, or listen to, and it will make your party seem like a gathering of very smart people.
Nick Gray:That's what I love.
Host:So what makes two hours the
Nick Gray:sweet spot?
Nick Gray:I think two hours is great because I suggest doing my parties on Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday nights only.
Nick Gray:Why is that the number one fear for a new host is that nobody will show up or worse.
Nick Gray:Only two or three people will show up and it'll be awkward.
Nick Gray:So I tell people, only host your parties on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday nights, cuz they're not socially competitive nights.
Nick Gray:Two hours shows them this isn't a crazy drinking bender.
Nick Gray:Wild rag party in and out.
Nick Gray:It's an efficient social gathering.
Nick Gray:Two hours also helps to get people to show up on time.
Nick Gray:Always list the start time and the end time.
Nick Gray:It gives people an idea of what to expect, and it encourages more people to show up when it's only two hours.
Nick Gray:They're like, oh, this is easy.
Nick Gray:I can do this.
Nick Gray:There's an easy.
Nick Gray:So
Host:now we know how to throw the perfect party, but how can we be a perfect guest at other people's
Nick Gray:parties?
Nick Gray:A pro tip that I have is if you're truly looking to build a relationship with the host, you know, a host is pretty busy at the party.
Nick Gray:Number one, you could ask the host, Hey.
Nick Gray:Do you want me to help people serve drinks as they arrive?
Nick Gray:You could ask the host, say, Hey, would you like if I just took some photographs here at the party, just some like candid, fun photos.
Nick Gray:I could take a group photo as well.
Nick Gray:I'll send 'em to you later that night.
Nick Gray:Oftentimes, the host forgets to take photos during their own party, and yet they can be a really positive, happy memory during the party.
Nick Gray:You can help by tidying up.
Nick Gray:Oftentimes there's party shrapnel, there's empty cups, there's beer bottles, there's cans, there's plates, there's just garbage that accumulates.
Nick Gray:You can help the host by doing that to sort of, um, tidy up.
Nick Gray:You can help create new conversations and merge groups.
Nick Gray:If you notice somebody that's not included, bring 'em over.
Nick Gray:Say, Hey, please come on over.
Nick Gray:Here's what we're talking about, by the way, for a guest, one of the.
Nick Gray:Things that you can do is when you join a group, remember these two words.
Nick Gray:If you walk up to a group and you wanna join it, simply say, please continue.
Nick Gray:Don't make them feel like they have to go around and everybody introduce themselves.
Nick Gray:Just join the group.
Nick Gray:Say, please continue.
Nick Gray:Listen, and when it makes sense to naturally join the conversation and introduce yourself, you can do that.
Nick Gray:Then of course,
Host:we have to ask, what's the best party that you have ever
Nick Gray:thrown?
Nick Gray:Hesitate to share this because it's not helpful for me to share the big, crazy parties that I host.
Nick Gray:But I'll tell you what I did anyway, last year for my 40th birthday, I rented out America's largest, uh, indoor water park for all my friends, and I invited about 40 of my friends and we all just rode water slides all morning.
Nick Gray:It was a lot of fun, but the next day we were all like limping and hurt.
Nick Gray:It was pretty funny.
Nick Gray:So where can listeners find the.
Nick Gray:I can find the book wherever books are sold online, and you can use these tips and techniques to make any social gathering better.
Nick Gray:Thanks for taking the time today.